Example sentences of "have come [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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61 THE Government 's cash-before-care NHS shake-up has come under fire — from sickened hospital managers .
62 A city council has come under fire for putting up its Christmas lights too early .
63 Its stance has come under fire from the president of the private sector 's wood alliance , Corma .
64 A SENIOR Anglican clergyman who declared that sex outside marriage should not necessarily be considered a sin has come under fire .
65 The Scottish Office has come under fire for failing to increase capital spending on social work .
66 Piggott has come under fire from American observers after Walter Swinburn told reporters that Piggott said Mr Brooks ‘ moved terrible ’ going to the start .
67 His football club , Olympique Marseille , has come under police scrutiny .
68 Britain 's so called special relationship with the United States has come under strain after President Clinton claimed that Britain had let America down by not backing its policies over Bosnia .
69 And if I dare say it , she has come to glory as the earthly manifestation of a holy trinity with Nicholas Ryan , father , producer , and his wife Roma , Holy Spirit and lyricist .
70 This college has come to life and advanced considerably under the direction of its very live wire Rector Mr Jocelyn Stevens .
71 He has come to England immediately by ship .
72 IN a week when Mark McNulty has had to pull out of the Jersey European Airways Open with a bad back , Sam Torrance , the holder , has come to La Moye with his hands covered in blisters .
73 The song ends ‘ These are the only ones of which the news has come to Harvard .
74 For Pierantozzi , a fearsome if handsome woman , has come to Crystal Palace this weekend in order to challenge her youthful rival once more .
75 Snowmaking has come to Scotland .
76 An English High Court Judge has come to Scotland to gather his evidence amidst claims that the former Re-Chem Toxic Waste Incinerator , in Stirlingshire , was responsible the death of a herd of cows .
77 Whenever I go in a minicab on my way to a radio or television programme — the companies are kind enough to take us in a car — I end up discussing with the driver how he has come to Britain in the fairly recent past and now has a job driving round London .
78 Quark Inc chairman , Tim Gill , has come to Quorum 's defence , dismissing Apple 's position as incorrect and ill-considered : in a letter he wrote to Quorum he adds that Quorum made a port to Unix feasible for him .
79 Lothar Baumgarten , the German artist , has come to New York just in time to express this fashionable sense of discomfort with an installation which occupies the whole of the recently restored spiral of the Guggenheim Museum .
80 And even though that town is Stockton , the roadshow has come to Stewart Park in Middlesbrough .
81 As university funding has come to hinge on publication , this has been encouraged for its own sake .
82 This is an area that has come to prominence in recent years as new kinds of instruments such as auction market preferred shares ( AMPS ) , convertible debt with premium put options and convertible capital bonds have appeared .
83 1 In recent years , as the New Right has come to prominence , a considerable number of political scientists have changed their assessment of the part played by interest groups in British politics .
84 ‘ It will help that he has come to Widnes , where a majority of players are well-disciplined , on and off the pitch , and live locally .
85 This Sunday , in Exeter , less than one person in ten has come to church .
86 The phrase ‘ a different voice ’ , which has come to sere as a popular and psychological shorthand for her conclusions , has important but ambivalent significances for psychology and feminism .
87 This is often far from the case and many a combination has come to grief at the very last fence .
88 ONE of Britain 's biggest service companies has come to grief with disastrous figures and a crash in its shares .
89 Many a ship has come to grief along this shore , including one in the 19th century carrying the dowry of Catherine of Braganza , Queen of Charles II .
90 Moreover , it is unlikely to be in such a position until it has come to grips with the broader contradictions underlying its current operation — its devotion to the Common Agricultural Policy on the one hand and its ambition to recruit the states of Central Europe as members on the other .
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